Type post Author Michael Behe Date May 12, 2016 CategoriesEvolutionGeneticsScience Reporting Tagged , __tedited, adaptive mutations, Barry Hall, citrate, contingency, dishonesty, E. coli, Elizabeth Pennisi, epigenetic change, genetic changes, hype, loss-of-function mutations, LTEE, media, motivated reasoning, peer review, public opinion, Richard Lenski, science journalism, Science News, science reporting, Scott Minnich, speciation Richard Lenski and Citrate Hype — Now Deflated Michael Behe May 12, 2016 Evolution, Genetics, Science Reporting 8 For more than 25 years, Lenski's lab has grown a dozen lines of the bacterium E. coli in small culture flasks. Read More ›
3d-rendered-medically-accurate-illustration-of-a-bacteriopha-225315049-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Michael Behe Date December 24, 2010 CategoriesEvolutionGenetics Tagged , __nedited, bacteriophages, DNA, E. coli, experimental science, First Rule of Adaptive Evolution, Jerry Coyne, speciation More From Jerry Coyne Michael Behe December 24, 2010 Evolution, Genetics 6 We should not automatically assume that the occurrence of duplicated and diverged genes in nature happened by unguided, Darwinian processes. Read More ›